ESG ETF: ‘Companies weren’t as aware of all the need to do the detailed work,’ expert says

In This Article:

Emerge Canada Inc. CEO and President Lisa Lake Langley details her diversity initiatives and discusses industry standards that she hopes to see improved upon.

Video Transcript

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SEANA SMITH: Inflows into us sustainable funds hitting the lowest level in seven years last year in 2022 amid growing backlash against ESG investing. This is according to a report from Morningstar. But despite that dip, plenty of investors are still buying them. So let's talk about it.

What exactly are they? ESG is standing for environmental, social, and governance. And it's a criteria used to evaluate a company's sustainability efforts. Now, one way to invest in ESG is through an ESG ETF, or an exchange-traded fund, made up of a basket of these types of companies that are prioritizing sustainable causes.

Now these funds cater to investors who want to put their money towards issues that are important to them. Investments typically include in these areas for the portfolio are efforts that they prioritize in climate change and carbon emissions, energy efficiency, gender and diversity, and also human rights. So for more on this space and the investment opportunity there, we want to bring in Lisa Lake Langley, Emerge Capital Management CEO and founder as part of this week's ETF report brought to you by Invesco QQQ.

So Lisa, break all this down for us. You have five ESG ETFs that trade here in the US. And I believe they are all managed by female fund managers. So talk to us just about your strategy and why you chose to go with female fund managers, why that's a priority.

LISA LAKE LANGLEY: Diversity is a key tenant at Emerge. I'm a majority woman fund company owner. We launched on September 8 and 9 five ETFs in the us and five in Canada, the exact same strategy, so that we would make more of a bang. Because we wanted to send a very important message to the industry. There is no other program anywhere in the world that just features women portfolio managers. And I've had calls asking me if this is legal.

I've had advisors asking me, you know, shouldn't we just be focusing on performance? Why are we focusing on gender? And there's such an industry problem that we have to educate about it a little bit. And they deserve an opportunity.

Only 5% of assets in north America are really being managed by women. Less than 11% are actually women portfolio managers. And all of this is based on self-reported stats. There is no regulatory compulsory reporting. And that's where the issue lives, right?

How do we know that women earn 83% on the dollar, you know, for male-- men in similar positions? Because that information is reported. But in the investment industry, you're just a innocuous investment professional. So--